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Black Pink Announces Tour, Bangkok Dates

BANGKOK — Lisa, Rose, Jennie and Jisoo are gonna hit Bangkok with that ddu-du ddu-du right after the New Year.

K-pop sensation Black Pink will come to Thailand to perform two dates in January at Impact Arena, Muang Thong Thani.

The concert is part of the band’s 2019 In Your Area World Tour, which was announced at noon Thursday in an online post that in less than three hours was already shared more than 78,000 times.

#BlackPink2019WorldTour also rushed to the top of the trending Twitter hashtags.

Black Pink is a girl group signed to YG Entertainment that debuted in 2016 to great popularity in Thailand. Member Lalisa “Lisa” Manoban, 21, is Thai. Their hits include summer banger hits “Ddu-Du Ddu-Du,” “Playing With Fire,” “Whistle” and a collab with English singer Dua Lipa on “Kiss and Make Up.”

It’s a band with crossover appeal.

In July, Panthongtae “Oak” Shinawatra, the 38-year-old son of fugitive former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, publicly declared himself a Blink. In the same month, a video dubbing junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha into “Ddu-Du Ddu-Du” became a viral hit.

Ticket details for the Jan. 12 and 13 shows have yet to be announced, but hurry, because Blinks, as Black Pink fans are known, are sure to snatch them up quickly.


Related stories:

Thaksin’s Son Declares for ‘Black Pink’ and K-Pop Sphere Erupts

Hear Prayuth Sing Black Pink, ‘Shape of You’ (Video)

Young Thai Girls’ K-Pop Parody is This Week’s Internet Catnip

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CPF Wins Set’s Outstanding Sustainability Awards and Thailand Sustainability Investment

CPF — The Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) granted two sustainability awards to Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL (CPF) including Outstanding Sustainability Awards 2018 and Thailand Sustainability Investment (THSI) for the 4th year that presented the company’s doing business with responsibility for social, environment and the management under good corporate governance through sustainable development principles to generate sustainable growth and positive returns to economy.

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Mr.Sooksunt Jiumjaiswanglerg, Chief Executive Officer – Agro Industrial Business and Co-President of CPF, said the SET Sustainability Awards is one of SET’s direction on quality development for listed companies in Thailand, which aims to create values to the corporate and social.

CPF operates business toward the vision “Kitchen of the World”, focusing on economic, social and environmental responsibilities. In addition, the company (both in Thailand and overseas investment) also encourages all of its stakeholders and business partners throughout its supply chain to apply sustainability development in line with good corporate governance. This is to guarantee its food safety, good quality and good taste to all consumers.

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The company drives through Sustainability Direction under the three pillars : “Food Security, Self-Sufficiency Economy and Balance of Nature”, in accordance with UN Global Compact and Sustainable Development Goals, covering good health and well-being, food accession, legal labor employment, climate action and environment management under the sustainable development etc.

“Sustainable development is CPF’s core principle to operate business sustainability and responsibility.  The company’s goal is to support global food production for food security to serve world’s population. We promise to lead all of our stakeholders to achieve sustainability in terms of better health and good quality of life, natural and environmental protection to pass on good things to the future world,” stressed Sooksunt.

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Mr. Sukhawat Dansermsuk, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) – Food Business and Co-President at CPF, said the company strives to develop a sustainable food business through relentless research and constant drive for innovation. The goal is to improve health and nutrition of consumers of all ages with fresh, safe, hygienic and nutritious foods under the world class standard from farm to table. In addition, the company has been developing healthy meals and food for patients at hospital to provide a new and tasty choice of ready-to-eat meal for each individuals with specific needs.

“We have been developed foods for patient and elderly as well as healthy foods and foods for beauty. CPF recently opened RD center at Ayutthaya Province. The state-of-the-art pilot plant has helped the company to accelerate innovation and raise the company’s R&D process to a new height,” Mr. Sukhawat pointed.

He added that CPF has committed to develop products under world class standard and high responsibility to society and environment to attain a sustainable and transparent production process and a traceability throughout the supply chain. This principle is in line with DJSI, the internationally recognized sustainable assessment.

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Bangkok Gets Cooler: Temperatures to Drop by 3C

A 2015 file photo, monks and novices in Nan province practice yoga at their school in the morning to stay healthy during winter.

BANGKOK — Can you feel the breeze today? With apologies to Elton John, it is where we are.

Following the nation’s official entry into the winter season Saturday, cooler temperatures are forecast to be on their way in the next 24 hours.

Average lows in the capital city will drop by up to 3C to about 22C. The northern part of Thailand will face windy conditions and a decrease of up to 4C to about 18C, meteorologists said Thursday morning.

Due to the cool snap, people are suggested to keep warm.

Unfortunately the south will not catch much of the cool. Residents and fishermen were warned of moderate wind and waves about 2 meters high. Ships in the Gulf of Thailand are advised to proceed with caution.

Related stories:

Storm, Flood, Fire Warnings as Cold Season Begins Saturday

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Divers Recover Lion Air Data Recorder on Indonesia Seafloor

Members of National Search and Rescue Agency inspect debris Wednesday retrieved from the waters where Lion Air flight JT 610 is believed to have crashed, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Fauzy Chaniago / Associated Press
Members of National Search and Rescue Agency inspect debris Wednesday retrieved from the waters where Lion Air flight JT 610 is believed to have crashed, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Fauzy Chaniago / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Divers on Thursday recovered a flight data recorder from the crashed Lion Air jet on the seafloor, a crucial development in the investigation into what caused the 2-month-old plane to plunge into Indonesian seas earlier this week, killing all 189 people on board.

One TV station showed footage of two divers after they surfaced, swimming to an inflatable vessel and placing the bright orange device into a large container that was transferred to a search-and-rescue ship.

“I was desperate because the current below was strong but I am confident of the tools given to me,” said navy 1st Sgt. Hendra, who uses a single name, in a television interview. After narrowing the possible location, “I started digging and cleaning the debris until I finally found an orange object,” he said, standing on the deck of a ship next to his diving mate.

The Boeing 737 MAX 8 plane crashed early Monday just minutes after takeoff from the Indonesian capital Jakarta. It was the worst airline disaster in Indonesia in more than two decades and renewed concerns about safety in its fast-growing aviation industry, which was recently removed from European Union and U.S. blacklists.

Navy Col. Monang Sitompul told local TV an object believed to be the aircraft’s fuselage was also seen on the seafloor.

The device recovered by divers is the flight data recorder and the search continues for the cockpit voice recorder, Transport Minister Budi Karya Sumadi told a news conference.

The location of the find was about 500 meters (yards) northwest of the coordinates where the plane lost contact and at a depth of 30 meters, said search and rescue agency head Muhammad Syaugi.

Data from flight-tracking sites show the plane had erratic speed and altitude in the early minutes of a flight on Sunday and on its fatal flight Monday. Safety experts caution, however, that the data must be checked for accuracy against the flight data recorder.

Several passengers on the Sunday flight from Bali to Jakarta have recounted problems that included a long-delayed takeoff for an engine check and terrifying descents in the first 10 minutes in the air.

Lion Air has ordered 50 of the MAX 8 planes and one of its subsidiary airlines was last year the first to operate the new generation jet.

Investigators say a preliminary report into the accident could be released within a month but complete findings will take several months more.

The Lion Air crash is the worst airline disaster in Indonesia since 1997, when 234 people died on a Garuda flight near Medan. In December 2014, an AirAsia flight from Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea, killing all 162 on board.

Indonesian airlines were barred in 2007 from flying to Europe because of safety concerns, though several were allowed to resume services in the following decade. The ban was completely lifted in June. The U.S. lifted a decadelong ban in 2016.

Lion Air, a discount carrier, is one of Indonesia’s youngest and biggest airlines, flying to dozens of domestic and international destinations. It has been expanding aggressively in Southeast Asia, a fast-growing region of more than 600 million people.

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‘Boy Sakol’ Denies Impersonating Student

BANGKOK — A man accused in September of pretending to be enrolled at elite educational institutions since 2011 is fighting back.

Sakol “Boy” Aiemsaard went to Bang Rak Police Station on Wednesday to tell his side of the story – that he never pretended to be a Chula student. In Thailand, pretending to be a state university student is a criminal offense.

“I never forged documents and never falsely implied that I was a Chula student in my business transactions or any other kinds of transactions. This is the truth,” Sakol told the police.

Read: Chula ‘Student’ Exposed for Years of False Enrollment Claims

He’s also accusing those who claimed he stole money from another university of defamation.

Sakol said that the photos that dragged him to fame – including one where he was at the annual Chula-Thammasat football game in formal garb for the parade – could be explained.

“I knew someone participating in the parade. The sign was around 10 kilograms, pretty heavy, and they needed someone tall to hold it, so I helped out,” he said. “Even eight months after that, there was no drama about it at all until last month. So if I could go back in time, I wouldn’t have held that sign.”

He also said other photos of him reading at the Chulalongkorn Library were real, since it is a library open to the public.

“I never had fake documentation to get into the library. I always gave my ID card and paid 20 baht to go in,” he said. “I just want to clear up the drama that I ever pretended to be a Chula student.”

He also filed a defamation complaint under the Computer Crime Act against two Burapha University students who told the media he had run off with 850,000 baht in class funds. Sakol was enrolled there in 2014 before dropping out.

“I did not take that money. The name on the bank account with the money isn’t even mine,” he said. Sakol said the funds had already been used for class activities.

When Sakol was “exposed” in September, friends he had hung out with at Chula including a Tararis Nrohtas had posted a now-deleted Facebook post imploring Sakol to answer why he had “faked” being a student.

“I do know these friends that posted those posts, but I’m not close to them. I also never went and sat in classes with them,” he said.

Sakol said he is currently studying at Ramkhamhaeng University and just finished his exams on Tuesday.

“This incident has disrupted my life very much. Whenever I go anywhere, people already brand me as a bad person,” he said.

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Related stories:

Chula ‘Student’ Exposed for Years of False Enrollment Claim

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Who Killed Ambrose? Canadian Mystery Puts Chinatown Audiences in Play

Photo: Ba Hao / Facebook

BANGKOK — A century ago, a Canadian tycoon vanished mysteriously, just one day after selling all the theaters he owned.

Based on the life of Ambrose Small, a Canadian theater group will bring “Ambrose,” an immersive, suspense stage play in which the audience becomes part of the story to a bar in Chinatown.

The show, part of the ongoing Bangkok Theatre Festival, was produced by the Single Thread Theatre Company of Ontario, Canada. It is directed by Liam Karry with stage designed by Jim Brewer, a Bangkok-based photographer also known as Darkle.

Tickets are 1,000 baht and available online. Seating is limited to 20 per show.

Running in English for 150 minutes, “Ambrose” will start at 6pm on Nov. 10, Nov. 11, Nov. 17, Nov. 18, Nov. 24 and Nov. 25 at Ba Hao. The Chinese-themed bar is located on Soi Nana in Chinatown. The best way to get there is to walk or take a short taxi ride from MRT Hua Lamphong.

Ambrose Small was an entertainment figure who owned several historic live theaters. In December, 1919, he vanished. His body has never found, creating one of Canada’s most perplexing and mystifying unsolved cases.

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A promotional poster of “Ambrose.” Photo: Single Thread Theatre Co. / Facebook

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FM Says Thailand Doesn’t Need Foreign Election Observers

An undated photo of Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai. Photo: Matichon
An undated photo of Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — The foreign minister said Wednesday it would be “inauspicious” to have foreign election observers for elections slated for February.

Don Pramudwinai said Thailand has dignity and is not a problematic country, so it doesn’t need foreign observers.

“The current government came from a coup but is different from other coups in the world, because we don’t forbid or remove rights excessively to the point where it affects the majority,” Don said.

Previous elections in 2001, 2005, 2007 and 2011 were monitored by the Asian Network for Free Elections, or ANFREL. ANFREL, which is based in Bangkok, fielded 60 observers from 24 Asian nations in 2011, the last successful election.

Don’s comments came in response to calls made over the months for foreign observers to be in the kingdom to ensure free and fair elections. He said elections are internal affairs and said he favored local observers before going on to defend the military government.

“Some ambassadors discussed with me and raised the lese majeste law issue, and asked why there exists such a law which limits free expression. I asked whether their countries have no specific measures and said Thais are well aware of the lese majeste law,” Don said. “If you count the number of people who oppose it, you will discover that it’s just a handful. So how can it be a problem when a majority does not see it as a problem?”

Don added that the ban on political assembly was imposed so the country could move forward and that there had been no restrictions in expressing views over the past four years.

On the same day, Pheu Thai party member Nakorn Machim urged the U.S.government to send election observers to Thailand to oversee the promised February polls.

Nakorn – a former Democrat MP for Phitsanulok province – recently joined the Pheu Thai party. He met Wednesday with politics, economics and public diplomacy officer Vi L. Jacobs-Nhan of Thailand’s US Consulate and submitted a letter while the two met in the province.

Nakorn later told reporters he is concerned that the vote will not be free and fair as he believes the junta – which staged the May 2014 coup and remains in power – may control proceedings. Nakorn said Jacobs-Nhan told him he would relay the message and letter to the authorities.

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New Rule Boosts Bahraini Sheikh for Asian Footie Election

Asia Football Confederation President Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa, left, poses Tuesday with FIFA President Gianni Infantino during an inauguration ceremony for the new building of the Asia Football Confederation in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
Asia Football Confederation President Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa, left, poses Tuesday with FIFA President Gianni Infantino during an inauguration ceremony for the new building of the Asia Football Confederation in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — A change in election rules approved Wednesday gave FIFA vice president Sheikh Salman bin Khalifa a better chance of retaining his leadership of Asian football.

The Bahraini royal faces a challenge from Saudi Arabia, expected to be its former football federation president Adel Ezzat, in a vote next April where regional politics are a likely factor.

Saudi Arabia is targeting the AFC presidency as part of a wider campaign encouraged by the kingdom’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, to build influence in international sport.

The 47-member Asian Football Confederation’s approval of the new rule means Sheikh Salman no longer needs the formal nomination of his home football federation, should it come under pressure from neighboring Saudi influence

“(The statute) requires candidates for the office of the AFC President to be nominated by at least three member associations – but not necessarily by the member association they represent,” the regional football body said in a statement.

The AFC’s elected leader gets one of FIFA’s eight vice presidencies and takes a seat on the world football body’s influential Bureau, which includes President Gianni Infantino and leaders of the six continental governing bodies. That panel is preparing to review Infantino’s preferred option to accept a USD$25 billion investment offer to revamp competitions.

Sheikh Salman confirmed in September his intention to be a candidate in the April 6 election, and urged Wednesday that the process be free from outside influences.

“As you know our elections are always based on the spirit of fair play,” said the sheikh, who lost the 2009 presidential vote to then-incumbent Mohamed bin Hammam in a bitterly fought campaign noted for accusations of wrongdoing from both sides.

“Like in football, the rules and regulations must be respected,” Sheikh Salman told delegates Wednesday at the close of the AFC congress. “We need to be strong on this matter. “We do not need nor do we want any third party interference or influence in our elections.”

The sheikh was first elected in 2013 to finish the term of former president Bin Hammam, who resigned before receiving a lifetime ban from FIFA. He was re-elected unopposed in 2015.

His expected challenger Ezzat resigned as Saudi football federation president in September to prepare a candidacy.

Sheikh Salman also gave Asia’s endorsement to Infantino, who is seeking re-election in Paris next June. The sheikh was second to Infantino in the FIFA presidential election in February 2016.

Infantino was in Kuala Lumpur this week and posed with officials from the continental federation at a ceremony to mark the opening of a new AFC headquarters.

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Son of Late Leicester Owner Vows to Carry on Father’s Legacy

Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha, the son of Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, and his mother Aimon, center left, lay a wreath Monday with family members outside Leicester City Football Club, Leicester, England. Photo: Rui Vieira / Associated Press
Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha, the son of Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, and his mother Aimon, center left, lay a wreath Monday with family members outside Leicester City Football Club, Leicester, England. Photo: Rui Vieira / Associated Press

LEICESTER, England — The son of the Leicester owner killed in a helicopter crash promised Wednesday to honor his father by continuing his “big vision and dreams” at the Premier League club.

“From him, I have received a very big mission and legacy to pass on and I intend to do just that,” Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha said in a tribute to his father, Vichai, who died with four other people when his helicopter spiraled out of control as it left the stadium following a Premier League game on Saturday.

Vichai, a billionaire owner of retail company King Power, led the consortium that bought Leicester in August 2010 and has forged a close bond not only with the soccer team but with the local community. Aiyawatt is the vice chairman.

In a message that appeared to underline their commitment to Leicester, Aiyawatt said his father had turned the club into a family.

“And nothing,” he added, “would make him prouder than to see how the Leicester City family that he built is supporting each other through a time of such sadness.”

Leicester’s grieving players will take to the field for the first time since the crash when they visit Cardiff for a Premier League game on Saturday.

The Foxes will travel to Wales by road on Friday after making the decision that flying would be insensitive given the circumstances of Vichai’s death, Britain’s Press Association reported.

Fans’ groups were meeting Wednesday to discuss a tribute to the club’s late owner at Leicester’s next home game, against Burnley on Nov. 10.

They are planning to march from Leicester’s city center to the team’s King Power Stadium before the game, with 5,000 supporters taking part – in reference to the preseason title odds of 5,000-1 given to Leicester the year it won the Premier League in 2015-16.

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First-Timer from Surat Thani Wins Miss Teen Thailand

Wanrada “Effy” Petchamnan is crowned Miss Teen Thailand 2018 on Wednesday night. Photo: Miss Teen Thailand / Facebook

BANGKOK — A Matthayom 4 student snagged the Miss Teen Thailand 2018 crown on her first try.

Wanrada “Effy” Petchamnan, 16, was crowned Miss Teen Thailand 2018 Wednesday night at BCC Hall in Central Ladprao.

“I’ve never been in a pageant, done modelling or shot advertisements. I’m just a normal kid,” the braces-wearing student at Suratpittaya School said after winning.

Effy won a 300,000 baht cash prize and a crown. Second place went to Chanoknan “Benz” Senpin,18, with Pawinee “Rebecca” Pegen, 15, winning third.

Miss Teen Thailand pageants have been held annually since 1989, with the winners getting a foothold into the Thai entertainment industry.

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Photo: Miss Teen Thailand / Facebook
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